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Word: pneumonia (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
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Usage:

...declared: "A tiny snack for luncheon, another snack for dinner is proving disastrous to the modern girl, who is so afraid of being overweight. . . . Men, too, are at fault with their customary coffee and pie for luncheon. They are reducing their vitality and making themselves liable to colds and pneumonia...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Medicine Notes, Oct. 25, 1926 | 10/25/1926 | See Source »

Died. Harry H. Bassett, 51, president of the Buick Motor Co., vice president and director of General Motors Corp.; at the American Hospital in Neuilly, France, of double bronchial pneumonia. He had gone to Paris for the International Automobile Salon...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones: Oct. 25, 1926 | 10/25/1926 | See Source »

...peak of his success, Sam has double pneumonia. His weak heart fails slowly. As he lies grimly cheerful in bed, completely absorbed in the fate of his body, it is less and less upon his public fame, more and more upon his dead wife and Delphine that his side-thoughts turn. Delphine commits suicide, victim of melancholy. Her young sister, Gwen, arrives to lament, to accuse. She stays to love Sam's son, Geoffrey. Sam passes his crisis but relapses. Deserted by Delphine, he utters his wife's name as his jaw drops...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: FICTION: Boys at Whitehall | 10/25/1926 | See Source »

Plain Sam Raingo, multimillionaire, British, unimaginative, "wangles a seat in Lords" and a minister from the "P. M." (Prime Minister). His meteoric rise in popular esteem, fear of the P. M.'s jealousy, ultimate confusion of his adversaries, loss of his mistress, and death from pneumonia fill two weeks and 393 pages. The last third of the book describes his death from every angle...

Author: By David WORCESTER ., | Title: The Autumn's Englishmen--Wells and Bennett | 10/18/1926 | See Source »

Zeiss microscope makers of Jena showed a cinema reel of unicellular life-isolated bacterium pneumococcus (pneumonia), bacterium streptococcus (pus), saccharomyces (yeast). It is possible to infect and kill an animal with a single germ. Such a germ proliferates to form a colony...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: German Renaissance | 10/4/1926 | See Source »

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